LSAT Reading Comprehension: Application & Evaluation Skills

0.0(0)
Studied by 0 people
call kaiCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/23

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Last updated 2:34 PM on 3/28/26
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced
Call with Kai

No analytics yet

Send a link to your students to track their progress

24 Terms

1
New cards

Application to a New Context

Questions asking you to apply a principle or criteria from a passage to a new example or situation.

2
New cards

Passage Tool

The principle, definition, or method extracted from a passage that is used to analyze a new scenario.

3
New cards

Two-Part Definition

A definition that requires both components to be met for classification.

4
New cards

Causal Claims

Statements asserting that one factor leads to another, requiring careful application to new situations.

5
New cards

Comparison in Academic Reading

The skill of analyzing multiple sources to understand differing viewpoints and methodologies.

6
New cards

Strengthen Questions

Questions that ask what new information would make an author's conclusion more likely.

7
New cards

Weaken Questions

Questions that seek information that would make an author's conclusion less likely.

8
New cards

Evaluate Questions

Questions asking for information that would help assess the strength of an argument by testing key assumptions.

9
New cards

Comparative Reading

Analyzing two short passages to compare and contrast their arguments, conclusions, and methodologies.

10
New cards

Core Relationship in Analogies

Understanding the underlying connection between two compared items in order to apply reasoning.

11
New cards

Assumptions in Reasoning

Unstated premises that link evidence to conclusions in arguments.

12
New cards

Vulnerabilities in Arguments

Weaknesses in an argument that can be exploited to challenge the author's conclusion.

13
New cards

Passage Priorities

Factors that the author considers most decisive in their argument, which should be weighted heavily when analyzing.

14
New cards

Misreading Conditions

Interpreting necessary conditions as optional, leading to incorrect answers.

15
New cards

Role Mapping in Analogies

Identifying roles in analogies rather than surface similarities to find the correct answer.

16
New cards

Argument Mechanics

The structure of a conclusion, its supporting evidence, and the assumptions that need to hold true.

17
New cards

Implications of Author's Claims

What each author's argument suggests about their beliefs or values compared to the other.

18
New cards

Internal Analogy Recognition

Understanding how an author's analogy functions within their argument.

19
New cards

Scope of Information

The range within which a claim or argument holds true, crucial for evaluating arguments.

20
New cards

Dissecting Comparative Arguments

Breaking down two arguments to analyze their agreements, disagreements, and differing methodologies.

21
New cards

Subtle Differences in Assumptions

Noting the varied presuppositions of authors in comparative reading.

22
New cards

cherry-picking lines

Selecting specific statements from passages while overlooking overall context.

23
New cards

Role of Evidence

How evidence is used by authors to support or critique arguments in comparative reading.

24
New cards

Conclusion Support in RC Passages

Identifying specific factual claims and evaluating their credibility within the context of the passage.